Showing posts with label recycle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recycle. Show all posts

Friday, September 25, 2015

Purple Gloves, or Green Ones?



As I was finishing a sustainability audit with the staff at Dumbarton House (DC) I asked "...so is there anything that just bugs you? Maybe it's a green opportunity." 
Jerry Foust, collections manager, grabbed purple nitrile gloves from his pocket and said "yes, these! We throw so many away; can we recycle them?"
Well it took over a year and the help of the Sustainable Museums team to sort through the options, but we uncovered ways to reduce the negative environmental impact of those gloves you use for collections care.
Green doesn't trump mission, so collections care is the priority, but there are ways to green your gloves. With permission we adapted the familiar chart prepared by Claire S. Barker. It now includes reduce/reuse/recycle options for the types of glove you may consider for collections care -- and it discusses going glove-free.
We hope you'll use the guide to review your choices, and to redirect any used gloves to avoid the landfill.  If you use Nitrile, Latex, or rubber gloves, you can collect and ship your gloves for just $87 - and they'll be upcycled.  For little historic sites, no worries, it takes less than a square foot of space for the collection box.
You can even collect used gloves for area museums...each museum can take turns hosting the recycling box. Each of you will take a step toward Zero Waste!

The Sustainable Museums Team: Sarah Sutton, Lia O'Donnell, Denise Mix, John Mayer, and Elizabeth Greeno

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Green Museum Trash

Environmental communication - sharing information about environmental messages in ways that inspire others to take personal action - is a growing field. It has so many layers of application that it can be overwhelming. It begins with basic clarity; it makes no assumptions of pre-existing knowledge; and it encourages people to make thoughtful choices by giving them information and encouragement to make those thoughtful choices.

As I embark on learning more about this, I have collected - and people send me - interesting examples.  This one makes sure you know that what goes in here ends up in the landfill - "you sure that's trash?"

Thanks to Tori Snell for this photo from the College of William & Mary

And this one makes sure you know specifically what goes to compost, to recycle and then - when all else fails - the dreaded landfill.
Mother Earth News Fair - PA 2012

 
Do your bins communicate?

Friday, November 16, 2012

Exhibit Production Recycling in Action

The Exploratorium is getting ready for a big move - from one repurposed building to a new one after 40+ years.  Their exhibit shop - which works in full view of the public - is pretty busy, but not too busy to recycle. 

They provide lots of bins in a designated area; the clearly segregate items and clearly mark obvious receptacles.  And they give away what they can.  Thanks Exploratorium.


Metal-only Recycling








Free Wood! This please-take-some box is out back of the Exploratorium. Anyone can use or repurpose wood scraps as needed.  This is great for the youngest one inspired by the exhibits inside...



Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Green Revolution – SITES’ Green Path for a Traveling Exhibit

It’s my dream com true: an exhibit in a PDF, with a guide to green community engagement.
Well, not exactly just a PDF, but darned close.

The staff at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago (MSI) together with the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service (SITES) have combined the scientific sustainability content you crave for your audience, with a reduce-reuse-recycle exhibit-installation philosophy that makes Green Revolution affordable, very low-carbon, and just the ticket for involving your audience in making green changes.

Here’s how it works:

1) You license part or all of the exhibit (total cost up to $5,000…eminently fundable by a community grant). This gives you access to all the design materials, guidebooks, and support you need. You can choose among five topics: waste, energy, greening your home, carbon footprint, and composting/gardening.
2) With your staff and volunteer partners, read all the materials and view installation photographs, talk with the SITES staff, and then start planning your personalized version of Green Revolution.
3) Collect ‘found’ materials (a few optional interactives have small cash costs)
4) Use the exhibit-build process as a museum outreach activity
5) Follow suggestions for, or make up your own, programs and activities to help your audience learn about sustainability and make greener choices.
6) When you choose to end the exhibit, you can repurpose the materials or recycle them.

Then you and your community work together to create the exhibit your way and with your community situation in mind. Here on the Chesapeake Bay, we would probably focus on watershed impact factors such as not fertilizing the lawn, keeping roads clean to reduce nutrient build-up in the rivers, and reducing energy or using alternative sources so we don’t build a power line across the Bay. I can see having the Boy & Girl Scouts, 4-H, the Maritime Museum, and Adkins Arboretum all working with the River Keepers to create a community exhibit out of materials collected through Scouting activities and our Habitat for Humanity’s new ReStore. There is no shipping, no packaging, no big notebooks of installation instructions, and no changes to your spaces. Now that’s green, and that’s creative.

What kind of museum should do this? Any kind.

Obviously Science and Nature and Children’s museums are naturals, so are Zoos and Aquariums, Gardens and General museums. There are all kinds of cool options for Art and History museums. Think what you could do using art in your collection to illustrate these themes, or what a great backdrop your historic house would be for the energy and home sections. For many, it would be a great way to engage a new audience with a new message and experience.

And you can have faith that it works. The MSI folks premiered it, and the Bob Jones Nature Center in Texas tested it. SITES hopes to present at AAM on its experience. In the meantime, check it out at www.sites.si.edu/exhibitions/exhibits/greenRevolution/index.htm.

Let Green Revolution help you with your public engagement, while letting your audience know that your community’s health is important to you.

Just like the SITES materials say: “Green Revolution is more than an exhibition, it’s an event and experience for your entire community.”


Photo courtesy Smithsonian: In Southlake, Texas, the average daily water consumption per capita is 290 gallons. For their version of Green Revolution, the Bob Jones Nature Center displayed this surprising community stat by hanging 300 cleaned gallon milk jugs from a tree.

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Twelve Days of a Green Christmas at the Historic Site


On the first day of Christmas, donors sent the historic site a much-needed energy audit

On the second day of Christmas, donors sent the historic site Two stormwater cisterns

On the third day of Christmas, donors sent the historic site a Three-part compost bin

On the fourth day of Christmas, donors sent the historic site Four solar golf carts

On the fifth day of Christmas, donors sent the historic site Five miles of window seal tape

On the sixth day of Christmas, donors sent the historic site Six chimney pillows

On the seventh day of Christmas, donors sent the historic site Seven heritage cattle

On the eighth of Christmas, donors sent the historic site Eight rooms of insulation

On the ninth day of Christmas, donors sent the historic site Nine hens a laying

On the tenth day of Christmas, donors sent the historic site Ten recycle bins

On the eleventh day of Christmas, donors sent the historic site Eleven storm window inserts

On the twelfth day of Christmas, donors sent the historic site Twelve Compact Fluorescents

Monday, November 29, 2010

Anlysis Paralysis

Sometimes the hardest part about going green is deciding. It can be hard to decide how to best label the recycle bins, decide which flooring is most durable and most green, or decide when to implement renewable energy installations. There is so much to know, and green options change so frequently, that it's difficult hard to recognize the right choice and the right time.


Get over it. There's no right thing or right time. You will make a thoughtful, informed choice, and then move forward on that path. Meanwhile other paths will appear that you may no longer be able to follow, and others who have chosen different paths, will speed ahead of you - or not. This is why it takes leadership to make green decision. A leader makes the best possible choice at the time and moves forward.

Getting stuck deciding is a greater issue than any concerns you have about second guesses.

I have a simple story I tell to illustrate analysis paralysis, it's about a cup of coffee.

I was at a conference having made the keynote presentation earlier in the day. I was part of a group of greenies and we were heading into the dessert and coffee part of the moving-dinner-at-museums evening event. With this group of greenies coming in behind me, I poured a cup of coffee - caffeinated. Well nuts, I couldn't drink that at 8:30 pm! what to do? I couldn't put it back, I couldn't waste it and the now-used cup and saucer with it. And no one wanted it, of course.

I froze. People lined up behind me waiting for their coffee. The group around me - imagined or real - watched to see how green I really was.

Jim saved me. He stood next to me and said, in a calm voice and as if it was a TV show I held a loaded weapon: "it's okay, Sarah, just put...the... cup...down".

I was freed from the spell, set the cup aside to be dumped and washed, and poured myself another.

Not very green. Not a big deal either.

Your challenges of course will be much weightier, I'm sure, but still the parable applies. And be assured, as you make more and more green decisions, you'll become practiced at identifying the priority needs for a situation, then identifying the pros and cons of possible solutions, weighing time and money and innovation factors, and then making a decision.

If you need practice, start with a coffee, move up to recycling bins and office supplies, then perhaps test a floor surface or a low-VOC paint in a small area, and gradually you'll regain that confidence you had before you had to think green.

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Twelve Green Museum Days of Christmas...


Here's hoping for a green holiday for all museums everywhere:

On the first day of Christmas, donors gave the museum a Building Management System

On the second day of Christmas, donors gave the museum two green roofs

On the third day of Christmas, donors gave the museum three living walls

On the fourth day of Christmas, donors gave the museum four PV Arrays

On the fifth day of Christmas, donors gave the museum five car-charging stations

On the sixth day of Christmas, donors gave the museum six stormwater cisterns

On the seventh day of Christmas, donors gave the museum seven bioswales

On the eighth day of Christmas, donors gave the museum eight motion sensors

On the ninthday of Christmas, donors gave the museum nine recycle stations

On the tenth day of Christmas, donors gave the museum ten operable windows

On the eleventh day of Christmas, donors gave the museum eleven low-flow faucets

On the twelfth day of Christmas, donors gave the museum twelve composting toilets